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Re: Libidn 1.34 released
From: |
Dennis Clarke |
Subject: |
Re: Libidn 1.34 released |
Date: |
Sat, 31 Mar 2018 13:55:59 -0400 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:52.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/52.6.0 |
On 31/03/18 01:45 PM, Dennis Clarke wrote:
On 31/03/18 12:00 PM, Tim Rühsen wrote:
<snip>
Happy hacking,
Tim
Thank you for this.
I was surprised to see an undefined symbol "alloca" in test ..
well there's the problem :
ALLOCA(3) Linux Programmer's Manual ALLOCA(3)
NAME
alloca - allocate memory that is automatically freed
SYNOPSIS
#include <alloca.h>
void *alloca(size_t size);
DESCRIPTION
The alloca() function allocates size bytes of space in the
stack frame of the caller. This temporary space is automati-
cally freed when the function that called alloca() returns to
its caller.
RETURN VALUE
The alloca() function returns a pointer to the beginning of the
allocated space. If the allocation causes stack overflow, pro-
gram behavior is undefined.
ATTRIBUTES
For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see
attributes(7).
+----------+---------------+---------+
|Interface | Attribute | Value |
+----------+---------------+---------+
|alloca() | Thread safety | MT-Safe |
+----------+---------------+---------+
CONFORMING TO
This function is not in POSIX.1.
There is evidence that the alloca() function appeared in 32V,
PWB, PWB.2, 3BSD, and 4BSD. There is a man page for it in
4.3BSD. Linux uses the GNU version.
NOTES
The alloca() function is machine- and compiler-dependent. For
certain applications, its use can improve efficiency compared
to the use of malloc(3) plus free(3). In certain cases, it can
also simplify memory deallocation in applications that use
longjmp(3) or siglongjmp(3). Otherwise, its use is discour-
aged.
Because the space allocated by alloca() is allocated within the
stack frame, that space is automatically freed if the function
return is jumped over by a call to longjmp(3) or siglongjmp(3).
Do not attempt to free(3) space allocated by alloca()!
Notes on the GNU version
Normally, gcc(1) translates calls to alloca() with inlined
code. This is not done when either the -ansi, -std=c89,
-std=c99, or the -std=c11 option is given and the header
<alloca.h> is not included. Otherwise, (without an -ansi or
-std=c* option) the glibc version of <stdlib.h> includes
<alloca.h> and that contains the lines:
#ifdef __GNUC__
#define alloca(size) __builtin_alloca (size)
#endif
with messy consequences if one has a private version of this
function.
The fact that the code is inlined means that it is impossible
to take the address of this function, or to change its behavior
by linking with a different library.
The inlined code often consists of a single instruction adjust-
ing the stack pointer, and does not check for stack overflow.
Thus, there is no NULL error return.
BUGS
There is no error indication if the stack frame cannot be
extended. (However, after a failed allocation, the program is
likely to receive a SIGSEGV signal if it attempts to access the
unallocated space.)
On many systems alloca() cannot be used inside the list of
arguments of a function call, because the stack space reserved
by alloca() would appear on the stack in the middle of the
space for the function arguments.
SEE ALSO
brk(2), longjmp(3), malloc(3)
COLOPHON
This page is part of release 4.15 of the Linux man-pages
project. A description of the project, information about
reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be
found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
GNU 2017-09-15 ALLOCA(3)
Oh hell --> " machine- and compiler-dependent. "
even worse ---> "Otherwise, its use is discouraged."
yikes.
Not portable.
Was this tested on strictly compliant posix systems ?
Dennis